Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Jason Day rides new swing to first-round lead in Wells Fargo Championship

Jason Day rides new swing to first-round lead in Wells Fargo Championship

POTOMAC, Md. — Three years and 364 days since his last victory, Jason Day describes himself as “obsessed” with honing his new swing and improving his results, even if he never gets back to No. 1 in the world. RELATED: Leaderboard | Determined to improve attitude, Matthew Wolff opens with 65 at Wells Fargo Championship There wasn’t much room for improvement Thursday as Day shot a 7-under 63 to take the first-round lead at the Wells Fargo Championship. Joel Dahmen was a shot back on what could be the best day for scoring at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm, with rain, wind and unseasonably cool temperatures in the forecast through Sunday. “Obviously, we’ve got some weather coming in, so I feel like we’re going to go into grind mode over the next few days, which I typically like,” Day said. “It’s going to be difficult.” The 34-year-old Day has been working with instructor Chris Como on a swing that will protect his chronically balky back, and he says it feels solid with every club except the driver. His renewed dedication and relative good health are encouraging signs from a player who won eight times in a 15-month span in 2015-16, including the PGA Championship and THE PLAYERS Championship. “I think about the golf swing in the morning, I think about the golf swing during the day and I think about the golf swing at night,” Day said. “There’s been conversations at 12 at night with Chris just because I have an idea in my head and a certain sensation and a feel.” Day’s last win came in this tournament at Quail Hollow. The Wells Fargo Championship moved to the Maryland suburbs of Washington this year because its usual venue is hosting the Presidents Cup in September. The International team at that event would surely welcome a resurgent Day, who made five of his eight birdies from inside 10 feet on Thursday. The Australian took the lead with a chip-in on the par-4 15th hole. “The thing that’s different between now and when I was No. 1 in the world, even though the technique might not have been as crisp as it is right now, I had all the confidence in the world, especially on the greens. So that’s always the goal,” Day said. Matthew Wolff, local favorite Denny McCarthy and PGA TOUR rookies Aaron Rai, Callum Tarren and Paul Barjon were two shots back. Rory McIlroy, the top-ranked player in the field at No. 7, had an up-and-down 67. Wolff’s previous two competitive rounds were an 81 and a 78 at the Masters, where the 23-year-old long-hitter finished behind every 60-something past champion in the field. He played a casual round at his home club a few days ago and lost every ball in his bag. Beware the player with nonexistent expectations. “I can go out and shoot 90 tomorrow and as long as I have a good attitude, I can put a check mark on this week and say that I’ve grown as a person and as a player and that’s just all I really care about right now,” Wolff said. “To be honest, it’s funny, but I’m not here to win a golf tournament, I’m here to have a good time.” Dahmen enjoyed his quick surge to the top of the leaderboard. After a 7-iron from 173 yards to 7 feet on the par-4 eighth hole, he stared at the scoreboard behind the green while waiting for playing partners Patrick Reed and Jason Dufner. Then he holed the putt to reach 6 under. “I like seeing my name up there. It’s something that, you know, that’s what we work for, right? To have a little bit of pressure in the first round I think is great,” Dahmen said. Dahmen’s putter cooled on the back nine, but he finally made another birdie when he missed an ace by inches at the par-3 17th. McIlroy’s only big mistake was a tee shot that started too far left and drew into the water on the par-4 fourth, his 13th of the day. A penalty drop and a sloppy chip led to double bogey, but he rebounded with birdies on the next two holes. “I said to myself walking off the green, if I could just get back to 3 under for the day by the end of the day after that, I would be pretty happy, and obviously I did that,” McIlroy said. Rickie Fowler hit two shots into the right-side wetlands on the par-4 sixth, then holed out from 134 yards to save bogey. He hit driver to 11 feet for eagle on the 305-yard, par-4 13th in a round of 66 that he summed up as “interesting.” “There was a couple that were a little offline and cost me a little bit early in the round, but other than that, a lot of good stuff,” said Fowler, who is working through swing changes and has dropped to 146th in the world. “Definitely happy with today.”

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Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
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Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
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Rory McIlroy+450
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Bryson DeChambeau+1100
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Tiger Woods enters Sunday five shots backTiger Woods enters Sunday five shots back

ORLANDO, Fla. – For all his winning history here at the Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard, it was traditionally done with blistering third rounds to get into the lead. That wasn’t the case for Tiger Woods in Saturday’s third round at the Bay Hill Club & Lodge, however. Oh, he birdied three times early and added three on the back nine, and with a 3-under 69 he pushed to 7 under. But unlike in seven of the eight times he has won this tournament, Woods will not be in the lead to start the final round. Instead, tied for 10th. When he slipped home a 12-footer to birdie the 18th and ignite more thunder, Woods casually assessed the situation and stayed unfazed by the commotion. “I’m four back,� he said, knowing the leaders had six or seven holes to play, “and I figure I’ll be five or six back at the end of the day.� He’s a veteran with great wisdom, because true enough, Henrik Stenson and Bryson DeChambeau held serve coming in. Stenson did bogey the par-3 17th and DeChambeau the par-4 15th, but with rounds of 71 and 72, respectively, they ended the day as they began it – atop the leaderboard. At 12-under 204, Stenson finished one clear of DeChambeau, but it would be foolhardy to suggest that Woods can only focus on those two. Not with Rory McIlroy alone in third at 10 under and Justin Rose tied for fourth with Ryan Moore at 9 under. Throw in Charley Hoffman and Rickie Fowler at 8 under and Woods knows there is a formidable group ahead of him. In fact, Stenson, DeChambeau, McIlroy, Rose, Moore, Fowler and Hoffman combine for 41 PGA TOUR wins and 41 more worldwide. Woods’ only victory in which he didn’t have the 54-hole lead here came in 2009, but then, he was alone in second and overtook Sean O’Hair. The challenge is more of a hurdle this time around. “I’m going to have to shoot a low one and probably get a little bit of help,� said Woods, who is playing his fifth tournament after having virtually sat out the previous two seasons. “But my responsibility is to go out and shoot a low one first.� NOTABLES Feels more like it: After a fast start in the Middle East on the European Tour, Rory McIlroy expected to continue that momentum. But coming into Bay Hill, he had missed the cut in two of his four starts on the PGA TOUR and played 13 rounds in 10 over. Those hiccups aside, McIlroy attacked the par 5s on the back – eagle at 12, birdie at 16 – then stuffed his approach to 2 feet to birdie the 18th. With 67, McIlroy got in at 10 under, solo third. “I wanted to at least give myself a chance,� said McIlory, who started six back and is now two back. “I can’t really ask for much more.� Is that any way to treat the host? You’d have to give Fowler high marks for the way he handled a bad break at the closing hole that ended his day on a sour note. His approach from 171 yards was tugged left into a bunker and ended up being as bad a buried lie as you could possibly imagine. He could barely see it, then he could barely move it a few feet. Fowler ended up with a double-bogey, which, on top of a bogey at 17, stung. From one off the lead through 16, he finished 8 under, tied for sixth and four back. He’ll get another chance: Justin Rose is not haunted at all by what happened last week at the Valspar Championship. In contention to win and playing in the final pairing, Rose shot 72 and faded to a share of fifth. “That was a great Sunday, really,� he said. “I really hung in there (without his best game). Hopefully that bodes well for tomorrow.� With a stellar 67, Rose will start Sunday’s fourth round at 9-under, tied for fourth and just three back. QUOTABLES I decided before the tournament that I was going to go ‘Full Zach Johnson’ on that hole. Well, I didn’t go ‘Full GMac.’  I feel like people are more into this (Tiger Woods) comeback this time around. So, it’s fun to play out there, for sure.  SUPERLATIVES Best sense of the calendar: On a day when he wore a green shirt and saw a sea of green everywhere, Graeme McDowell didn’t need to be told that it was St. Patrick’s Day. Which meant he was going to celebrate his bogey-free 69. “What was UMBC (University of Maryland, Baltimore County), 2,000-to-1? The odds are way less that I’m going to have a Guinness later today.� Best stretch: He was 38 holes into his tournament and Austin Cook had made just four birdies. Then, he made five in a row, starting at the par-4 third. He added three on the back to shoot 66 to move from T-66 to T-18. Most water: Hard to argue that Adam Scott doesn’t feel like he needs a mask and snorkel on the par-5 sixth. He hit his second shots into the water in Rounds 1 and 2, then his third into the hazard Saturday. He is 4 over on the hole. Rudest greeting: The par-4 first hole ranked eighth-toughest (4.000 field average) and was followed by the par-3 2nd, which ranked toughest (3.273). It was particularly painful for Luke List, who started tied for sixth, but promptly went bogey, double-bogey. Longest birdie: Harris English made a putt of nearly 48 feet for one of the few birdies at the 215-yard, par-3 14th.   SHOT OF THE DAY

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